1670 New American Chocolate House: Difference between revisions

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"Portland building removes chocolate shop signage after artist links branding to slave trade."
"Portland building removes chocolate shop signage after artist links branding to slave trade."
<blockquote>"Signage outside an upcoming Portland chocolate cafe, 1670 New American Chocolate House, was removed Tuesday morning after an artist linked its branding to the trans-Atlantic slave trade. The artist, Molly Alloy, pasted words and a dotted arrow to connect the three colonial ships printed outside the 1670′s future home to slavery. The cafe, found at The Rodney building in Portland’s upscale Pearl District, is expected to open by year’s end."<br/> &nbsp; &nbsp;- The Oregonian/OregonLive, '''12 November 2019 &nbsp;''' &nbsp;</blockquote>
<blockquote>''"Signage outside an upcoming Portland chocolate cafe, 1670 New American Chocolate House, was removed Tuesday morning after an artist linked its branding to the trans-Atlantic slave trade. The artist, Molly Alloy, pasted words and a dotted arrow to connect the three colonial ships printed outside the 1670′s future home to slavery. The cafe, found at The Rodney building in Portland’s upscale Pearl District, is expected to open by year’s end."''<br/> &nbsp; &nbsp;- The Oregonian/OregonLive, '''12 November 2019 &nbsp;''' &nbsp;</blockquote>
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[[File:Molly-Alloy-signage-2019-11-11.jpg|800px|thumb|left|alt text]]
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[[File:Molly-Alloy-open-letter-2019-11-11.png|600px|thumb|left|alt text]]
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Revision as of 23:56, 12 November 2019

"Portland building removes chocolate shop signage after artist links branding to slave trade."

"Signage outside an upcoming Portland chocolate cafe, 1670 New American Chocolate House, was removed Tuesday morning after an artist linked its branding to the trans-Atlantic slave trade. The artist, Molly Alloy, pasted words and a dotted arrow to connect the three colonial ships printed outside the 1670′s future home to slavery. The cafe, found at The Rodney building in Portland’s upscale Pearl District, is expected to open by year’s end."
   - The Oregonian/OregonLive, 12 November 2019    

 

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https://books.google.com/books?id=SmiaXVW7Y8QC&lpg=PA70&ots=OLqjQxZLpq&dq=1670%20slave%20cacao&pg=PA70#v=onepage&q=1670%20slave%20cacao&f=false

Gudmundson, Lowell, and Justin Wolfe, eds (2010). Blacks and Blackness in Central America: Between Race and Place (Duke University Press, 2010).

 


References